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00:05Buckingham Palace.
00:06Certainly, sir.
00:12Last winter, we shot over 12,000 pheasants between us,
00:16but that doesn't account for individual tallies.
00:18So, to spice things up,
00:20I told Lester to put the names of guns and individual scores up in the smoking room.
00:24That's a wonderful idea.
00:26Look at this salon war issue.
00:27How many pheasants do you suppose Papa shot last weekend?
00:30It should be carmine pink. Instead, it's almost lilac.
00:33106 bris.
00:35This war's a horrible thing,
00:37but its effect on the ink supply is made for some remarkable shades.
00:40Get the Huchy here!
00:42Get the Huchy here!
00:46Hold up, please!
00:48Get the Huchy here!
00:58Yes, thank you.
01:00Pardon me.
01:02Sir?
01:10I have been asked to give you this letter from Downing Street, sir.
01:17Do you look at that.
01:18The war stamp overprint.
01:20Missing the S.
01:22Another rarity for the collection.
01:24We should check the backs of them, too.
01:25Sometimes they pick up wet ink from the sheet underneath.
01:28What is it?
01:29Your Majesty.
01:30Your Majesty, Your All Highness.
01:32A letter from the Prime Minister.
01:34Antiguaid?
01:34Concerning their Imperial Majesties,
01:37the Tsar and Tsarina of Russia.
01:39The government is willing to send a ship
01:42to bring the Romanovs to safety here in England.
01:45The Prime Minister does not wish to do so
01:47without your support.
01:49Public perception and so forth.
01:53The war.
02:06Shall I go back with a yes?
02:10To their rescue?
02:16Show it to your mother.
02:19Her judgment is unfeelingly better than mine.
02:37Have a good day.
02:39The honorable brother.
02:40I am not a king.
02:43I am one of my Freunde of Russia.
02:45And I went off.
02:46Even though he at us...
02:53I used to return to it.
02:54HAZI TRAINED
02:59Nicholas Alexander, Александр Levid,
03:03мне прислали тебе шум касательно бывшей императорской семьи.
03:08Вы должны немного одеться.
03:10Мне предписано отправить вас в более безопасное место.
03:15Повторяю, вас перевезут
03:17в более безопасное место.
03:19yeah
03:21this is the best
03:23and he will not let us know
03:26that he will not let us know
03:27you think he will be
03:29he will be
03:31he will be
03:31of course
03:32of course
03:34of course
03:36of course
03:37of course
03:38of course
03:40of course
03:44she
03:50feels
04:02now
04:04the
04:04morning
04:05now
04:13he's
04:14Watch out.
04:29Well, girls, please!
04:34And, as it says, a portrait on the road.
04:38They know that nothing happened with you.
04:41I think.
04:44Yes, of course.
04:50Come here.
04:52What are you doing here?
04:54Bring me here.
04:56Now.
04:59Please.
05:00Quickly.
05:02Here and here.
05:05Here and here.
05:14Good.
05:15Sit down, sit down.
05:16Sit down.
05:17Sit down.
05:26We're ready?
05:28The photographer will soon come.
05:31We won't hold long.
05:35Ready, chaps?
05:38I'm looking forward to this.
05:57I'm looking forward to this.
06:04Due to the fact that your relatives in Europe continue to protest on Soviet Russia,
06:11the Ural's police have decided to kill you.
06:14That's what?
06:15This is the revolution!
06:18This is the revolution!
06:20This is the revolution!
06:22I've got you!
06:28Hurry up, Maddy!
06:56Let's go!
07:27Let's go!
08:20Let's go!
08:36Let's go!
08:37It must have been a fascinating trip.
08:39It was.
08:40First Western leader to visit Moscow since the coup.
08:44I am curious to hear your impressions of Mr. Yeltsin.
08:47When the coup was launched, he could easily have compromised with the plotters,
08:51tried to make a deal with them, but he never wavered and the people love him for it.
08:56That said, I'm not certain I've seen him sober yet.
09:01But I thought you'd spent several days in his company.
09:04I did.
09:05He can't have been drunk all that time.
09:08I think he might have been.
09:09And friends, this is all, you know?
09:11Friends must hold each other.
09:14Not least because I think, I may have been.
09:19But once you get used to the table slamming and the profanity, he's straightforward and likable.
09:27And it turns out.
09:31Mr. Yeltsin is something of an anglophile.
09:34Really?
09:35Obsessed with the idea of meeting me, apparently.
09:38and receiving a formal invitation to the palace.
09:41That's nice.
09:42Is that all you have to say?
09:44Sorry, I'm late, that's all.
09:45What for now?
09:47Flight to Munich, then to Hamburg for a Duke of Edinburgh award ceremony,
09:51followed by a World Wildlife Fund event in Brazil, then Alaska, Canada, then back to London.
09:58We managed to combine it all with a couple of carriage driving competitions, too.
10:03Ah, here it is.
10:04Did you ever get tired?
10:06Only by sitting still.
10:09We're different that way.
10:12Yes.
10:14More and more different.
10:19Right.
10:20I'm off.
10:25See you in three weeks.
10:26Yes.
10:52The Duke of Edinburgh had invited me to watch him compete at the Cannon Ground, which is an easy course,
10:59so long as the shackle doesn't pop off as you're crossing the jeep hunt, which is an easy course.
11:04It did for his Royal Highness, who I seem to recall refused to let go of the reins.
11:09Before I flew through the air like a graceful parabola, landing on my head in the grass.
11:14And yet still, he persuaded me to pursue carriage driving as a hobby.
11:18And I've never looked back.
11:27Guten Tag, Hamburg!
11:30The Duke of Edinburgh's award was hailed today as the world's leading youth achievement program.
11:36Its founder and patron, Prince Philip, was in Germany for the occasion.
11:39Then he set off for a whistle-stop tour of Sao Paulo, Alaska, and Nova Scotia,
11:45a typically busy schedule for a public servant who, in his eighth decade,
11:49chose no sign of slowing down.
11:51The Queen, meanwhile, is preparing to meet the Russian president, Boris Yeltsin,
11:55on his first official visit to Britain.
11:58The trip heralds a new era of strong ties and cooperation.
12:01The first Anglo-Russian friendship treaty since 1766 will be signed.
12:09It was Lenin himself who refusively said,
12:13there are decades where nothing happens,
12:15there are weeks where decades happen.
12:18The Prime Minister has grown rather fond of President Yeltsin
12:21and is keen that we give him lunch at the palace.
12:24Yes, I'd heard that.
12:27I did a little research on Mr Yeltsin.
12:31It turns out that as a younger man, he was a regional official in the Urals.
12:36First secretary of the party committee in Svedlovsk Oblist, to be precise.
12:43Svedlovsk is the name given to the city formerly known as Yekaterinburg.
12:49Yes.
12:51Which is where Ipatiev House was located.
13:00Go on.
13:11Welcome to Buckingham Palace, director.
13:14Would you like to follow me?
13:17Should we please?
13:19All right, will you please?
13:22Yes, that's right.
13:24First bilateral congratulations, sir.
13:27Vyaches, Vyaches,
13:29Vyaches,
13:31I will open you with a secret of our people.
13:36Would you like to know a secret about the Russian people?
13:38Please, please.
13:42In our heart of hearts, we are all still monarchists.
13:46Even at the height of Stalin's purges, when a Soviet citizen tells a story,
13:55we start by saying not once upon a time,
13:59but in the good of the time.
14:02In the good of the time.
14:05For the good of the time!
14:08Good good!
14:13Good funk!
14:16Good дух!
14:25I have a request that you would come to Moscow on a state visit to celebrate the end of
14:38the communist and the restoration of democracy. I'm flattered by your invitation, but there is
14:45something you should have considered before extending it. What is it?
14:57Nicholas and his family, beloved cousins of my grandfather, King George V, were murdered by the
15:02Bolsheviks. I understand you personally gave the order for that house to be demolished,
15:09an act of great disrespect to my family's memory.
15:18Its demolition was a shameful piece of communist barbarism.
15:26But it was the 1970s, and I was just a local functioner.
15:32The orders came from the very top, from Andropov and Brezhnev themselves.
15:39The Romanovs deserve a decent burial.
15:49I agree.
15:55You have my wish that I will do everything I can to restore their dignity.
16:01Good. Then we can discuss royal visits.
16:05Then we'll talk about royal visits.
16:07For a good royal time.
16:10For a good royal time.
16:15Mr. President, on the left, please.
16:18That's it.
16:19And three, two, one.
16:23Why did she mess up with me so far?
16:26A little to your left. Thank you.
16:27We all know the blood of Romanovich.
16:30On these kings, not in the Kremlin,
16:34I would recommend her to be careful in expressions.
16:38But we can put her in the back.
16:43What did he say?
16:46How thrilled he is to be here.
16:49He's very kind.
16:50Very good.
17:01And thank you.
17:38Let her know I'm back, will you?
17:40Sir.
17:46Within hours of arriving back in Moscow,
17:48President Yeltsin ordered the excavation of the forest near Epaty of House.
17:52He personally insisted that the very best team of forensic scientists be sent.
18:09And sure enough, they soon found bones.
18:20It was clear a horrific murder had taken place in line with historical accounts.
18:27Skulls smashed in by rifle butts, bullets embedded in temples.
18:39Hurry up, hurry up, hurry up.
18:43After the slaughter, it seems the Bolsheviks doused the bodies in acid,
18:50burned their clothes and buried them in a mass grave.
18:58The authorities are confident that these are indeed the Romanov remains.
19:04But because of the acid damage, the authentication process has hit something of a dead end.
19:12Russian pathologists have been painstakingly assembling the fragments,
19:16grouping them by sex and cross-referencing with dental records.
19:22But there's only so much they can do.
19:25Which is why they have now come to us.
19:28And more particularly, His Royal Highness the Duke of Edinburgh.
19:39I'm told the best way to identify and authenticate the remains is through DNA.
19:44And it turns out the best, the only place in the world for bone DNA sequencing is here, in England.
19:52Aldermastin, yes.
19:53And apparently, because of the age of the bones, they can only use a particular kind of DNA that passes
19:58through the maternal line.
20:00Mitochondrial.
20:03Oh, you knew that?
20:04Yes.
20:06How?
20:08I read.
20:12Anyway, since your maternal grandmother, Princess Victoria of Hesse, was Empress Alexandra's elder sister, making the Tsar's wife.
20:22My great aunt, yes.
20:23It turns out you can be incredibly useful.
20:27That's a first.
20:28How?
20:29By helping them to prove if the remains are, or are not, Romanov's.
20:33By giving a sample of whatever it is that they need.
20:36Can you be more specific?
20:40Hair, blood, saliva?
20:42Didn't you ask?
20:45No.
20:48Why not?
20:49Why not?
20:49Weren't you curious?
20:51Not even a little bit?
21:00To get to my DNA, they took a sample of my blood, which they vacuum sealed in a plastic bag.
21:06Then they have to extract it.
21:07Yes.
21:08Using these strange machines.
21:10Look, you see?
21:11I destroyed them.
21:13Then to separate it all out, they use this centrifuge.
21:16Oh, yes.
21:17Eventually, all you're left with is this tiny amount of DNA, which they subject to an electrical current.
21:25It's amazing what they're doing.
21:26500 years ago, they'd have been called alchemists.
21:28It is alchemy.
21:29What started out as a file of my blood has been transformed into this image.
21:34A unique pattern of parallel bands called lanes.
21:37The idea behind it is that we compare these bands with those of the Romanovs and, um, hey presto.
21:45It was a match?
21:47Yes.
21:47With 98.5% certainty.
21:50Which means the case can be closed and the Romanovs varied with dignity.
21:54All thanks to you?
21:55No, thanks to science.
21:56No.
21:57To you.
21:58You were the key.
21:59It was your DNA that I unlocked a mystery.
22:01No.
22:01All I did was give a sample.
22:03Science did the rest.
22:04But thanks to this, we'll be able to learn much about your family in their final days.
22:11You don't find this exciting?
22:13Seeing one's entire essence and history...
22:16What, reduced to a series of banal anonymous lines?
22:18I'm sorry.
22:19There is nothing banal about this.
22:21This is our essence, our lives, written in another glorious language.
22:26Nigel!
22:27Can you just keep it down, please?
22:28I'm sorry, sir.
22:29I'm a little deaf.
22:32And the implications that no matter what choices we make, our basic code remains the same is so...
22:39Determinous?
22:42Profound.
22:43We're used to looking at genetic predisposition for diseases.
22:46But what about behavior?
22:48Our decisions?
22:49Do we really have any choice at all?
22:52Is any of it really an accident?
22:54That we're even here, in this moment, talking about this?
22:59Or is it somehow all preordained?
23:12Where do you live?
23:14I live in Moscow.
23:17It's had the most extraordinary effect on him.
23:20Not just the science, but connecting with his own past.
23:24You know how he's always been restlessly searching and scratching away, trying to make sense of who he is or
23:30what he is.
23:31He's always been something of a mongrel.
23:33Well, the uncovering of the Romanov remains seems to have reawakened a fascination in him with all things Russian.
23:39Why?
23:41The person he's related to, the Tsarina, was born Alex of Hesse and was German, not Russian.
23:49He's German as white sausage.
23:52Don't tell Philip that.
23:53Because now that it has been confirmed that we are going to Russia, he's been reading book after book.
23:58Clearly?
23:59Yes, connecting with his orthodox roots.
24:02God help me.
24:03Oh, I'm all for it.
24:04It's just so good to have him engaged again.
24:07As recently as felt as though we've been growing apart.
24:10But this Russian trip feels like a shared adventure.
24:13A shared passion.
24:16We have so few shared interests these days.
24:40What did the window cleaner see in the Kremlin?
24:46Nothing.
24:47Nothing.
24:47That's the trouble with iron curtains.
24:56Very good.
24:57No.
24:58No.
25:07No.
25:14No.
27:35There have been times where we have seemed to live in different worlds.
28:10It's not merely a thought, but a comprehensive new footing based on cooperation, understanding
28:18and respect.
28:53A new era of partnership.
28:56In which both of us can flourish together.
29:36This is very disappointing.
29:39We've come all this way on the understanding that my relatives will finally be buried to discover the burial can't
29:44take place.
29:45Why not?
29:46Why not?
30:15It's bound to be dysfunctional.
30:19It's not just disappointing regarding that.
30:23Disappointing for us, too.
30:25I had hoped we would spend more time together on this trip.
30:28I've barely seen you.
30:29I've been busy.
30:55I've been busy.
30:58Clearly.
30:58It's not very much to work out what you were born.
30:59I was born orthodox.
31:03Just one of our many differences.
31:07How else are we different?
31:10After 47 years of marriage, we might ask ourselves, how are we still alike?
31:17We've got different interests, different passions, different churches.
31:24I'm more energetic.
31:26More restless.
31:27More curious.
31:29Your desire for calm, for stability, for silence.
31:34Not to question, not to probe, not to provoke, interrogate.
31:39Has sometimes left me...
31:45What?
31:48Lonely.
31:51I wish this DNA business had never happened.
31:54My disenchantment long predates that.
32:01Oh.
32:05So tell me.
32:09How have you addressed this disenchantment and loneliness?
32:14Is it not the time and place?
32:15I disagree.
32:16It's the perfect time and place.
32:21Well, I've had to seek companionship elsewhere.
32:28Companionship?
32:29Yes.
32:30Companionship.
32:33Intellectual companionship.
32:35Spiritual companionship.
32:38Oh, Lord.
32:41I told you this is the wrong time.
32:43Who?
32:49Well, in essence, it's a group of us.
32:54A gang.
32:56A community of friends focused on carriage driving and competitions and house parties.
33:01All right.
33:05And I suppose the closest friendship is with Penny.
33:10Rumsey.
33:15Your godson's wife.
33:18Friendship, Lilibet.
33:19She's half your age.
33:22Couldn't it just be a secretary?
33:24A nice girl from the typing pool with a short skirt and adoring eyes.
33:27It's not that sort of companionship.
33:29That would just make me even more lonely.
33:30Penny is in the family.
33:32A married woman.
33:33Yes, and entirely focused on her marriage and her duty.
33:36Who would never compromise you.
33:38But it does compromise me.
33:40It compromises me.
33:45Me.
33:46As your soulmate.
33:58And if I ask you
34:04to end your companionship.
34:07That would be a mistake.
34:12I don't want to be asked to give up something when I've done nothing wrong.
34:18But I accept that the newspapers and some other idiots
34:21might see me in the company of a beautiful young woman
34:23and, well, jump to the wrong conclusions.
34:27So I'd like you to do something.
34:32What?
34:33I'd like you to befriend Penny.
34:36I'd like you to be seen with Penny.
34:39You're asking me to legitimize your...
34:41My friendship.
34:43My companionship.
34:45Yes.
34:47You might learn something, too.
34:54Tell me, what would I learn?
34:55How the Romanovs really met their death.
34:58We already know that.
35:00They were slaughtered by the Bolsheviks.
35:02You know what?
35:03The Bolsheviks pulled their triggers and used their bayonets.
35:07But who has the blood on their hands?
35:36You were afraid of the trucs?
35:40I'm a lawyer.
35:40I don't know.
36:12I don't know.
36:25Hello.
36:27Welcome to Windsor Castle, Lady Ramsay.
36:30The Queen is down by the stables.
36:32Oh, yes.
36:32Can we?
36:33Yes.
36:35Indeed, ma'am, those sanction is looking a little spooky, I'm afraid.
36:38Oh.
36:39He may be troubled.
36:41Oh, he hasn't lost his appetite, has he?
36:43No, clearly.
36:44Well, just keep up the good work.
36:46Will do.
36:47Lady Ramsay has a right, ma'am.
36:54It's Emily, isn't it?
36:55Yes, ma'am.
36:56How are you settling in?
36:57Very well, thank you, ma'am.
36:58They're keeping you hard at work?
36:59Of course.
37:01Well, thank you very much.
37:02I'll pop back in tomorrow.
37:04See you tomorrow, ma'am.
37:12Morning.
37:13Good morning, Majesty.
37:14A hearty breakfast.
37:15He's a greedy lad.
37:19Your Majesty.
37:20Shall we walk?
37:28The Duke of Edinburgh, ma'am.
37:33Said you might have a theory about who's to blame for the murder of the Russian imperial family.
37:38Ah, it's not my theory, ma'am.
37:40I'm just a curious student.
37:42That's such an attractive quality.
37:45Curiosity.
37:47Some historians suggest that your grandparents, George V and Queen Mary, were presented with a clear opportunity to save the
37:54Romanus, but chose not to.
37:56I can't imagine such a thing.
37:58King George and Tsar Nicholas were first cousins.
38:01They even looked alike.
38:02No, my grandfather would never, could never, do anything to harm his beloved Nicky.
38:09It's possible the motivation came from elsewhere, as suggested by one or two other accounts I read.
38:15How many did you read?
38:16Half a dozen.
38:18Good heavens.
38:20On the English side.
38:21A few more on the Russian side.
38:23Ah.
38:23That would have impressed him.
38:26And, um, have been alerted to a source.
38:30Here, at the archives in Windsor.
38:35Oh.
38:41Hello, Ruth.
38:42Good morning.
38:46Good morning, Your Majesty.
38:53So.
38:55Yes.
38:56The diaries of young Edward VIII, where he described a breakfast with his parents in 1917, and a letter that
39:06had come from the Prime Minister Lloyd George.
39:10The letter stated that he had agreed to send a ship to bring the Romanovs to safety here in England,
39:15but wanted the King's agreement.
39:19Shall I go back with a yes?
39:23To their rescue?
39:28Show it to your mother.
39:29Well, her judgment is unfailingly better than mine.
39:39What say you, my love?
39:42Do we send the ship?
39:48No.
39:51It's possible one might come to regret it.
39:55You see, there was a rivalry between the two women.
39:59Oh.
40:00Oh.
40:02Excuse me.
40:12Yes.
40:13So there was a rivalry between the two women that went all the way back to their time as young
40:19German princesses, before they were married.
40:22Alexandra was prettier and from a grander family.
40:26But it was my clever grandmother, Mary, who Queen Victoria initially wanted the eldest son of Edward VII.
40:30Yes.
40:32But only after Alexandra had first rejected him and married Nikolai Romanov instead.
40:39Hence the rivalry.
40:41Mary didn't want the prettier grander Alexandra here in England upstaging her.
40:45It's a nice theory.
40:47But quite aside from the fact my grandmother was devotedly married to King George,
40:51I'm surprised none of the thirteen books or more which you so impressively read in all their languages
40:56focused on what I believe to be the real reason Queen Mary didn't want to have Alexandra here in England.
41:01And it had nothing to do with the rivalry between two women.
41:04My grandmother was far too busy protecting the monarchy against a popular revolt to worry about being looked down upon
41:10by Alexandra.
41:12Giving asylum to the Romanovs presented a much greater threat.
41:16There was widespread opposition to the Tsarina in England as she was seen as pro-German at the very time
41:23we were at war with them.
41:32The truth is Queen Mary was devastated when she heard they'd been killed.
41:38Your Majesty the Tsar is dead.
41:50But a sovereign, one cannot show those emotions so one buries them.
41:57And that silence becomes part of one's own DNA.
42:04But how commendable of you to show such interest and do all that reading.
42:11Since the death of my daughter I somewhat disappeared into books.
42:19And carriage driving.
42:21Yes.
42:23Yes, that's been a huge help.
42:25It's quite a gang.
42:27So I gather.
42:30It's not Norton's thing.
42:34No.
42:36Our interests, our lives, seem to grow further and further apart.
42:43I could never leave him.
42:45Nor Broadland's.
42:48Leonora's grave is there.
42:50And I need to see that every day.
42:53And the House needs me to focus on it.
42:55And he needs me too.
42:58I'm glad to hear of your sense of duty.
43:02And of your commitment to your marriage.
43:04And to a house that has been so important to me personally.
43:08Philip and I honeymooned at Broadlands, as you know.
43:11Yes.
43:12Yes.
43:20It's important people understand how close the ties are between our families.
43:25And should they happen to see the Duke of Edinburgh out and about with a beautiful younger companion,
43:29It would be an irritation if they felt a liberty to jump to any wrong conclusions.
43:35So why don't you come in the car with me to church this Christmas at Sandringham.
43:40To nip all that in the bud.
43:41I'm going to get and work.
43:49To be continued...
43:51No, no, no.
43:51No.
43:55No.
44:01No.
44:03No.
44:08No.
44:09No.
44:10No.
45:44Merry Christmas.
45:45Mrs. Timmy, please come and live in Buckingham Palace with me.
46:13The Prime Minister, Your Majesty.
46:16Prime Minister.
46:17Your Majesty.
46:19I'm delighted to say Russian scientists have now confirmed the final set of remains as
46:25Tsar Nicholas, which means the official burial of the imperial family can take place.
46:30Oh, good.
46:32In his phone call with me, a positively giddy President Yeltsin said he hoped a line could
46:37be drawn under the matter once and for all, and that friendship and cooperation between
46:41our two countries could resume.
46:43Was that giddiness or tipsiness?
46:47Yes.
46:48Good question.
46:49I believe Yeltsin is sincere in his desire for democracy.
46:54One just wishes he led with greater...
46:57Sobriety?
46:59Authority.
47:00Reports out of Russia suggest the landscape is dangerously unstable, and the worry is it
47:04will result in the need for hardline leadership again, and we will be back to square one.
47:10Hmm.
47:11Except...
47:12I prefer to think of square one with Russia as a state of friendship, not enmity.
47:17One forgets our two nations, thanks in part to family ties, have been more successful as
47:23allies than enemies.
47:25A scene like that, the revolution and Cold War are a blip in an otherwise long and happy
47:30marriage.
47:31Speaking of happy marriages, congratulations are in order, your wedding anniversary this
47:35weekend.
47:37Yes.
47:39Forty-seven years.
47:41And counting.
47:45You and Mrs Major?
47:48Twenty-four years this year.
47:53We must all be doing something right.
47:57What do you suppose that is?
48:04One of the most memorable accounts of a long successful marriage comes from Dostoevsky's
48:10wife, Anna.
48:12She and Fyodor were, she said, of contrasting character, different temperaments, entirely opposing
48:20views, yet they never tried to change one another nor interfere with the other's soul.
48:27This, she believed, enabled her and her husband to live in harmony.
48:34By having nothing whatsoever in common?
48:37Hmm.
48:41The key to a happy marriage, it seems.
48:54No, you're not the least bit interested.
49:00And leave it.
49:01Good talk.
49:02Good talk.
49:02Where's he gone?
49:03Where's he gone?
49:03Are you ready?
49:04Come along.
49:05Come along.
49:06Come along here.
49:07Where's that?
49:07Where's that?
49:08Let's go along here.
49:09Dogs.
49:09Dogs.
49:10Come along.
49:11Are you ready?
49:12Where's that?
49:12Oh.
49:13There you go.
49:15Very good.
49:16There you go.
49:17Very good.
49:17There's another one.
49:18Who wants a treat?
49:19Who wants a treat?
49:20Come here.
49:21Come here.
49:23Good.
49:24Good.
49:25Good.
49:26Good.
49:26Oh.
49:26Wes, are you ready?
49:28Are you ready?
49:30Wes?
49:32Wes?
49:34Wes?
49:36Wes?